New Orleans Saints 2011 - deepest team in franchise history

this is a discussion within the Saints Community Forum; By all accounts, the Saints are loaded. One through 53, the roster has never been more impressive, a potent combination of experience, youth and ability.
A group of precocious newcomers (Mark Ingram, Darren Sproles), budding stars (Malcolm Jenkins and Jimmy ...

Even normally reserved Saints Coach Sean Payton appears impressed. Earlier this week, he told the NFL Network he loved the make-up of his team -- "I love this roster -- and he's strutted the practice field at Airline Drive like a man who knows his deck is stacked.

The roster is so deep, heralded draft picks Cameron Jordan and Martez Wilson have been buried on the depth chart and rarely heard from in training camp.

"We've got a lot more depth than we've had in years past," Payton said. "We're deeper in the defensive line, at linebacker, we've got a good young group at receiver.

"So if you just look, and periodically we'll do this, we'll put it up compared to a season ago, two seasons ago, we'll put it up to teams in our division, and I think early on, this has been something that gets everyone excited."

On paper, the Saints indeed look like Super Bowl contenders. But we all know the most talented team doesn't always capture the Lombardi Trophy. The Saints weren't the most talented team two years ago. But they were the closest, most determined and perhaps most fortunate. Just because the roster is stacked, doesn't mean the locker room will gel or the breaks will align.

There's also this: The NFC is absolutely loaded. The Packers, Eagles and Falcons all harbor legitimate Super Bowl hopes. The Cowboys, Giants, Bears and Bucs are hardly pushovers.

"Every year, every training camp, you have to establish your identity again as a team," Brees said. "No matter what you did the year before, no matter how many of the same guys you have coming back, you have to re-establish that identity."

One thing the Saints have going for them is continuity. That could mean more than ever this season. The unprecedented nature of the offseason has put teams with new coaching staffs and overhauled rosters at a severe competitive disadvantage.

New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft said the most stable organizations will have an advantage this season because of the instability of the offseason.

"I think you'll see that those teams that had stability both in terms of their coaching, their offensive and defensive coordinators and quarterback, the teams with stability have the best chance, I'm my opinion, of making the playoffs," he said.

If Kraft is correct, the Saints should be in great shape. New Orleans, once a revolving door for coaches, general managers and quarterbacks, has become a bastion of stability. The Saints -- yes, the Saints -- have quietly become the most stable franchise in the league.

This will mark their sixth consecutive season with the same quarterback, head coach and general manager. No other team in the league can say the same. Not the Patriots. Not the Steelers. Not the Colts.

This has been said before numerous times on various threads, but I just love the fact that the Saints is now a franchise that players around the
league want to be a part of and willing to play for less money - instead of being a franchise that all rookies feared they would be drafted by.

This has been said before numerous times on various threads, but I just love the fact that the Saints is now a franchise that players around the
league want to be a part of and willing to play for less money - instead of being a franchise that all rookies feared they would be drafted by.

That fact still doesn't quite make sense to me...I mean...it does, I just have a hard time believing it after all these years.